3. Don’t push us.
We know you want to help us, but please don’t push us. When my abuser and I finally split, kind-hearted people started pulling and pushing me in ten different directions in an effort to help “fix” my life. But the thing is, all they did was smother me.
I now work with DV victims, and if there’s one thing I’ve learned — maybe the most important thing — it’s that you can’t push a victim. Life after abuse is scary. Victims have to face a lot of things that they tried for a very long time to ignore, and for the first time in a long time they get to put themselves first.
This new path of independence is important for a victim to learn to live their own life, and sometimes they need to do that in their own way, on their own time. So be there for them, support them, offer advice, make safety a priority, but know when to back off and let a victim become their own survivor.
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